Campus Phone: 
(641) 269-3229
Fax: 
(641) 269-4733
Unit (Dept., Office, Center, etc.): 
Position: 
Assistant Professor
On-Campus Address: 
Mears Cottage 201, 1213 Sixth Avenue
Primary Academic Interest: 
race and ethnicity in US history, including Native American and African American history

Assistant Professor

Albert Lacson teaches courses that focus on race and ethnicity in US history, including Native American and African American history, race in early America, comparative slavery, and European-Indian relations in colonial North America. In his research, he seeks to illuminate the implications of a fundamental fact of colonial North American history: the continent's native peoples constituted a demographic majority over European colonists. Lacson's dissertation, "Ambiguities of Conquest: Indians and Missionaries in Alta California, 1769-1821," examines Indian-Spanish relations during the period of Spanish colonization in California.


Courses Regularly Taught:

HIS 100: Making History: The Rise and Fall of New World Slavery
HIS 225: Native American History, 1491-1865
HIS 227: African-American History
HIS 295: Special Topic: Early American/Native American Perspectives

Seminars Taught:

HIS 321: Colonial Encounters in North America